Wow: Read What Jason Chaffetz Doesn’t Want Conservatives To Know As He Runs For Speaker

Utah Congressman Jason Chaffetz presents himself as the “conservative option” to House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy in the race to replace John Boehner as Speaker of the House. However, the problem for Chaffetz seems to be he has a history of saying “how high?” when Boehner asks him to jump.

It was Mark Meadows of North Carolina who was instrumental in Boehner’s departure, and Meadows has long been a thorn in Boehner’s side. Chaffetz could be counted on to do pretty much whatever Boehner wanted, and earlier this year, after defying Boehner on a hot button procedural vote, Chaffetz ripped Meadows from his spot as a House Oversight and Government Reform subcommittee Chairman.

House Oversight and Government Reform Chairman Jason Chaffetz has stripped North Carolina Rep. Mark Meadows of his subcommittee chairmanship, just days after he defied leadership on the House floor by voting against a party-line procedural motion.

“Sometimes the coach needs to make a change on the field,” Chaffetz (R-Utah) told POLITICO Saturday. “He’s still a valuable contributor, and I really like Mark Meadows, he’s a good person. But I need to make a change.”

Losing a subcommittee chairmanship midway through a congressional session is among the most serious punishments thus far in Speaker John Boehner’s (R-Ohio) majority. Boehner and his leadership team have grown frustrated with Republicans who vote against the procedural “rule” motion. Those votes — which allow the Republican leadership to bring a bill up for debate and a vote — typically fall along party lines. But a group of conservatives has voted against the measures, mostly in protest of Boehner’s leadership. Republican leadership sees the move as unacceptable —akin to ceding power to Democrats.”

The article continues:

Meadows was one of the 34 lawmakers who voted against the motion. Chaffetz said there were a “variety of factors” that led to him losing his chairmanship of the Government Operations subcommittee.

“I’m just going to leave it at that,” he said, when asked about the other factors. “There were a variety of factors, but I did what I felt was in the best interest of the oversight committee.”

Chaffetz said he this was his decision, not the Republican leadership’s.

Many subcommittee chairs voted against that resolution, and have not been punished. Ohio Rep. Jim Jordan, who chairs the conservative Freedom Caucus, chairs an oversight subcommittee that oversees health care, benefits and administrative rules. He has not lost his chairmanship.”

>>>Chaffetz was recently the target of a revenge plot by the Secret Service after some at the agency were upset with the Utah Congressman for questions he posed during a heated hearing on some of the group’s security lapses.